Azure EA VM reserved instances
This article summaries how Azure reservations for VM reserved instances can help you save your money with your enterprise enrollment. For more information about reservations, see What are Azure Reservations?.
Reservation exchanges and refunds
You can exchange a reservation for another reservation of the same type. It's also possible to refund a reservation, up to $50,000 USD per year, if you no longer need it. The Azure portal can be used to exchange or refund a reservation. For more information, see Self-service exchanges and refunds for Azure Reservations.
Partial refunds
We’ll issue a partial refund when EA customers return reservations that were purchased using overage and not Azure Prepayment (previously called monetary commitment).
To return a partial refund with Azure Prepayment:
You can view refund details in the Azure portal. To view refunds:
- Navigate to Cost Management + Billing > select a billing scope > in the left menu under Billing, select Reservation transactions menu.
- In the list of reservation transactions, you'll see entries under Type labeled with
Refund
.
Reservation costs and usage
Enterprise agreement customers can view cost and usage data in the Azure portal and REST APIs. For reservation costs and usage, you can:
- Get reservation purchase data.
- Know which subscription, resource group, or resource used a reservation.
- Chargeback for reservation use.
- Calculate reservation savings.
- Get reservation under-utilization data.
- Amortize reservation costs.
For more information about reservation costs and usage, see Get Enterprise Agreement reservation costs and usage.
For information about pricing, see Linux Virtual Machines Pricing or Windows Virtual Machines Pricing.
Reservation prices
If you’ve negotiated reduced reservation prices, you can view the discounted prices in the purchase reservation purchase experience, Retail Prices API or the price sheet.
The prices for reservations aren't necessarily the same between retail rates and EA. They could be the same, but if you’ve negotiated a discount, the rates will differ.
Prices shown in the Azure Pricing calculator and Retail Prices API are the same. Querying the API is the best way to view all prices at once.
Reserved instances API support
Use Azure APIs to programmatically get information for your organization about Azure service or software reservations. For example, use the APIs to:
- Find reservations to buy
- Buy a reservation
- View purchased reservations
- View and manage reservation access
- Split or merge reservations
- Change the scope of reservations
For more information, see APIs for Azure reservation automation.
Azure reserved virtual machine instances
Reserved instances can reduce your virtual machine costs up to 72 percent over Pay-As-You-Go prices on all VMs. Or up to 82 percent savings when combined with the Azure hybrid benefit. Reserved instances help you manage your workloads, budget, and forecast better with an up-front payment for a one-year or three-year term. You can also exchange or cancel reservations as business needs change.
How to buy reserved virtual machine instances
To purchase an Azure reserved virtual machine instance, an Enterprise administrator must enable the Reserved Instances purchase option. For more information, see View and manage enrollment policies.
Once the EA enrollment is enabled to add reserved instances, any account owner with an active subscription associated to the EA enrollment can buy a reserved virtual machine instance in the Azure portal. For more information, see Prepay for virtual machines and save money with Reserved Virtual Machine Instances.
How to view reserved instance purchase details
You can view your reserved instance purchase details via the Reservations menu on the left side of the Azure portal. The Reservations menu provides a summary of your reserved instance purchases, including the number of reserved instances purchased.
How can I change the subscription associated with reserved instance or transfer my reserved instance benefits to a subscription under the same account?
You can change the subscription that receives reserved instance benefits by:
- Signing in to the Azure portal.
- Updating the applied subscription scope by associating a different subscription under the same account.
For more information about changing the scope of a reservation, see Change the reservation scope.
How to view reserved instance usage details
You can view your reserved instance usage detail in the Azure portal.
Your usage detail and advanced report download CSV has more reserved instance usage information. The Additional Info field helps you identify the reserved instance usage.
If you didn't use the Azure hybrid benefit to purchase Azure reserved VM instances, reserved instances will emit two meters (hardware and software). When you use the Azure hybrid benefit to purchase reserved instance, you won't see the software meter in your reserved instance usage detail.
Reserved instance billing
For enterprise customers, Azure Prepayment is used to purchase Azure reserved VM instances. If your enrollment has enough Azure Prepayment balance to cover the reserved instance purchase, the amount will be deducted from your Azure Prepayment balance. You won't get an invoice for the purchase.
In scenarios where Azure EA customers have used all their Azure Prepayment, reserved instances can still be purchased, and those purchases will be invoiced on your next overage bill. Reserved instance overage, if any, will be part of your regular overage invoice.
Reserved instance expiration
You'll receive email notifications, first one 30 days prior to reservation expiry and other one at expiration. Once the reservation expires, deployed VMs will continue to run and be billed at a pay-as-you-go rate. For more information, see Reserved Virtual Machine Instances offering.
Related content
- For more information about Azure reservations, see What are Azure Reservations?.
- To learn more about enterprise reservation costs and usage, see Get Enterprise Agreement reservation costs and usage.
- For information about pricing, see Linux Virtual Machines Pricing or Windows Virtual Machines Pricing.